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iphone 5C

Technology

iPhone Sales Top 9 Million

Apple’s iPhone 5s and 5c break a record and sells 9 million units

“This is our best iPhone launch yet?more than nine million new iPhones sold?a new record for first weekend sales,” said Tim Cook, Apple’s CEO. “The demand for the new iPhones has been incredible, and while we’ve sold out of our initial supply of iPhone 5s, stores continue to receive new iPhone shipments regularly. We appreciate everyone’s patience and are working hard to build enough new iPhones for everyone.”

Congrats Apple! I can’t wait to get my 5s in few weeks.

Asymco has a fantastic graph showing how significant the past weekend was for Apple. It even compares it to the competition. Localytics found that the 5s outsold the 5c by 3.5x. This shows that Apple doesn’t even really need to make a “cheap” device.

A German hacker group “breaks” into Touch ID

CCC, one the world’s largest and most respected hacking groups, posted a video on its website that appeared to show somebody accessing an iPhone 5S with a fabricated print. The site described how members of its biometrics team had cracked the new fingerprint reader, one of the few major high-tech features added to the latest version of the iPhone.

It doesn’t look that convincing…but if this is correct, Apple’s moved the bar to breaking into those phones from stealing the phone and a 4 digit (or no passcode) to having:
–  Stolen iPhone
– a 2400 dpi resolution image of the correct fingerprint (where the hell will they get this?) 
– a 1200 dpi laser printer & transparent paper
– Pink latex milk or white woodglue
– a non-trivial amount of time

That doesn’t seem like a real “hack” to me. A real hack would have been something like opening control centre, going to camera, then bypassing the passcode.

Additionally, Touch ID is completely misunderstood by many critics. The point of Touch ID was to help solve the problem that many users go about their daily lives without a passcode. Which is the worst possible scenario. Touch ID solves it to a great extent for general consumers.

Steve Jobs’ childhood home may become historical site

Jobs moved to the house with his foster parents as a 7th grader, and lived there through high school.

In the attached garage, he and Steve Wozniak toiled to assemble the first 50 Apple 1 computers. The pair sold them to Paul Terrell’s Byte Shop in Mountain View for $500 each.

A version of the ranch-style house appears in the recent “Jobs” biopic with Ashton Kutcher.

Nine months later, in 1977, Apple Computer Co. was formally established and moved its operations to nearby Cupertino.

Good for Steve and his family. They deserve this.

 

Technology

September 20, 2013

Apple’s iPhone 5s and 5c expected to hit a record 6-million 

In New York, customers queued up around the block to get into Apple’s flagship Fifth Avenue store. The gold-coloured version of the device sold out during the morning at the Regent Street location in London, and U.S. carriers pushed back shipment dates for that model to October.

I hate line ups, so I woke up at 3AM EST and successfully ordered the 16GB iPhone 5s in the new Gold colour along with a black leather case. The Apple store says I should have it by October 16. Fingers crossed. Tim Cook and other execs were at the Palo Alto store.

The full Businessweek interview with Tim Cook

“We never had an objective to sell a low-cost phone. Our primary objective is to sell a great phone and provide a great experience, and we figured out a way to do it at a lower cost. Therefore, we can pass that on. And we figured out a way to sell 4S at substantially less than we were selling it for before, and we’re passing it on. So we think there will be a lot more people in our tent, and we can really serve a lot more people. And that feels good.” – Tim Cook

It’s fantastic to hear it straight from Mr. Cook that Apple was never ever looking at lowering the quality of their products. The rest of the interview involves stocks, Android fragmentation and Touch ID.

USA Today’s interview with Jony Ive and Craig Federihi

A case is point is iPhone 5s’s TouchID, a fingerprint scanner embedded in the central and lower home button that instantly reads a print presented to its glass eye at almost any angle. Ive is literally at a loss for words when asked to describe its creation.

“This right here is what I love about Apple, this incredibly sophisticated powerful technology that you’re almost not aware of, it absolutely blows me away,” he says. “You can’t get this without working cross-functionally.”

Federighi is quick to admit that any engineer tasked with such a challenge would be sure to call attention to his brilliant work. “You know, you’re going to have some big message saying ‘Scanning!’ and buzz-buzz-zzz-zzz later it says ‘Authenticated,’ blink-blink-blink, with 10 seconds of animation,” he says, as Ive starts laughing.

“Ultimately we realized all that had to disappear,” says Federighi. “If it disappears, we know we’ve done it.”

I just love this design philosophy.

US Senator questions Touch ID

It’s clear to me that Apple has worked hard to secure this technology and implement it responsibly. The iPhone 5S reportedly stores fingerprint data locally “on the chip” and in an encrypted format. It also blocks third-party apps from accessing Touch ID. Yet important questions remain about how this technology works, Apple’s future plans for this technology, and the legal protections that Apple will afford it. I should add that regardless of how carefully Apple implements fingerprint technology, this decision will surely pave the way for its peers and smaller competitors to adopt biometric technology, with varying protections for privacy.

You can read all of the questions in the above link. But Senator Franklin lays forth some valid questions and I hope Tim Cook (now on Twitter!) answers them.

Apple’s iPhone 5 touchscreen is 2.5 times faster than Android devices

“Even a two-year old iPhone 4 beat out the other Android devices,” Relan said. “You expect this from Apple’s design team, while others may view their responsiveness as good enough. Now we know why the Android touch keyboard is not as snappy.”

I’m actually pretty surprised by these findings. As usual, quality over quantity.

Grand Theft Auto V grosses over $1 Billion in the first 3 days

Rockstar spent an estimated $260 million on the development of Grand Theft Auto V, but the money, time, and care put into the game’s development is obviously paying dividends. Other publishers should take note.

Some nice profits there eh Rockstar? I am currently half way through GTA5. And I am loving every second of it. You should pick it up ASAP for your PlayStation 3 or Xbox 360.

Ballmer says authorities should control Google’s “monopoly”

CEO Steve Ballmer opted to highlight his concerns over Google’s business practices. During a presentation at Microsoft’s financial analysts meeting, Ballmer discussed how Microsoft might generate money in consumer services. “Google does it,” he noted. “They have this incredible, amazing, dare I say monopoly that we are the only person left on the planet trying to compete with.” Asked by an analyst how Microsoft can attack Google’s dominance in search and advertising, Ballmer explained “we’re the only guys in the world trying,” with the Bing search engine.

I agree somewhat with Mr. Ballmer.

New Tesla patent for 400-mile battery on a single charge

A report by Global Equities Research shows that Tesla recently filed patents 20130187591 and 20130181511, which describe a combination lithium-ion and metal-air battery pack. This hybrid battery pack would primarily use the lithium-ion side, only drawing power from the metal-air battery pack on extended journeys. Metal-air batteries, which use oxygen as an electrode, have a shorter lifetime when exposed to regular charging, but use more common elements like zinc or aluminum that drastically reduce battery costs.

Good stuff Tesla. Keep it coming.

BlackBerry reports Q2 $1 Billion write-off and slashes 40% of work force

“Organizational moves will continue to occur to ensure we have the right people in the right roles to drive new opportunities in mobile computing,” a BlackBerry spokesman said. He declined to comment on the 40% figure.

This came as a surprise to the market and myself. It’s pretty unfortunate. I used to be a Crackberry addict 4 years ago and as a Canadian, it does hurt a bit. I just found it odd that BlackBerry decided to make this news public 30 minutes before the closing bell on a Friday. Typically, companies would leave reports like these after trading hours.

What killed the Blackberry? Employees started buying their own devices

But the pace of innovation in the consumer smartphone market was so rapid that employees became dissatisfied with their BlackBerrys. And eventually, the advantages of iOS and Android devices became so obvious that corporate IT departments were forced to capitulate. They began supporting iPhones and Android devices even though doing so was less convenient.

There is a big difference in the device people WANT to use and HAVE to use.

BlackBerry Co-Founder considering big for his former company

Mike Lazaridis, the co-founder of BlackBerry who stepped down as co-chief executive in 2012, has reached out to private equity firms about a possible bid for the troubled company.

Mr. Lazaridis has separately approached the Blackstone Group and the Carlyle Group about making an offer, according to people familiar with the matter. These people cautioned, however, that the talks were preliminary and might not lead to any bids.

This is actually big news. And despite Thorsten Heins’ hard work and effort, this could be the big break BlackBerry needs. Lazaridis could very well be BlackBerry’s “Steve Jobs” and reinvigorate the company. I am hopeful for Canada’s tech giant. They are the only one we have left. But they really need to convince me that I want one of their products.

Technology

This Brightened Everyone’s Day

“This will brighten everyone’s day” is the slogan Apple Inc. used to promote today’s iPhone keynote in Cupertino.

At this event, there was absolutely no mention of Mac Pro, MacBook Pro, iPad, iPad mini or even iPods. It was all about their bread and butter, the iPhone. In fact, they introduced two (2) brand new ones. These are some quick points of my impressions on the event.

iPhone 5s 

  • Touch ID. Looks fast and effective. And this makes me super excited as I care very much for data security, but find inputting a passcode tedious. I was worried it might take too long to read finger prints. It’s actually very secure as it only captures finger print data and is encrypted locally on the CPU and never in the cloud.
  • Additionally, I found the following forum quote very practical and insightful on how useful Touch ID is:

All I know is that it takes 4-5 seconds to home button + slide to unlock + passcode and even longer if you are using alpha numeric password.

Personally I unlock my phone ~50 times per day.

Saving ~4 seconds between slide to unlock and passcode is roughly ~200 seconds per day saved unlocking my phone or ~3 minutes. 3 minutes per day equates to roughly ~18 hours per year or more than $5,000 worth of lost productivity unlocking my phone.

That alone makes this touch sensor worth while.

  • 8 Megapixel camera but with larger sensor pixels and a f/2.2 aperture lens. There is a 10 still frames per second (FPS) burst mode, dual LED flash for truer skin-tone and color reproduction. There is also a 120fps “slow-motion” feature that allows you to slow down your videos natively. The engineers at Apple actually understand photography and there is a lot more to a great camera than just stuffing it with low-quality megapixels such as a ridiculous 41 megapixel Nokia Windows Phone…
  • They are also making all of the iWork apps such as Pages, Numbers, Keynote, iMovie and iPhoto for free download. I paid for all of them.
  • There is still no sign of NFC (near field communication). However, they did mention “iBeacon” which could prove to be better in the long run. Basically, NFC is dead in the water.
  • The ‘s’ in ‘5s” stands for sensor. It has a brand new and kind of surprising M7 chip. This acts as a separate processor that is mainly used for motion detection and health-related apps. But ultimately, it will help with battery life too as it takes a lot of the workload off the main processor. For the Apple website:

M7 knows when you’re walking, running, or even driving. For example, Maps switches from driving to walking turn-by-turn navigation if, say, you park and continue on foot.

  • Lastly, it has the new A7 ship. The 5s boasts the worlds first smart phone with a 64-bit processor. Any other device had a 32-bit processor. This big jump brings the 5s’ CPU to the level of a desktop. However, admittedly, at this moment in time, this upgrade may be a bit overkill. But we shall see as it is apparently required for the finger print scanner and the new camera features. Those saying that the 5s isn’t a significant update are clueless. This is a incredibly significant upgrade in smart phone chip sets.
  • So, to sum up the 5s, if ground-breaking performance, the best smartphone camera and unparalleled security are important to you, then pick up it up on September 20, 2013.

iPhone 5c

Looks better than I expected. I think we were all slightly fooled into believing that it would be JUST solid colours. While it is kind of, Apple brought forth their 80’s looking silicon cases that add contrast and variations in different color combinations. It think it looks fun. Overall, I feel this might just be Jony Ive’s most “pure” iteration of the iPhone to date, even more so than the 5s. The five variations are right from the new iOS 7 color palette.

“We believe the iPhone is an experience. And experience is defined by hardware and software working harmoniously together. We continue to refine that experience by blurring the boundaries between the two,” Ive says early on in the video. The words are spoken as only a man now in charge of both hardware and software design can speak.

But essentially, the 5c is just a plastic polycarbonate 5. The only downer is that off-contract, it is $545 for the 16GB model, which is only $100 less than the base iPhone 5s model. I thought it would have been cheaper in the $350 USD range.

On Apple’s new iPhone strategy

The most controversial aspect of today’s event was iPhone pricing. I see a schism developing among the tech punditry. On one hand, there is the belief that market share is king and Apple must address the bottom of the market because developers will begin to focus on Android’s sheer numbers instead of iOS. On the other side, where I stand, market share is not created equal. It is okay if Apple doesn’t address the lower end of the market since five consumers who don’t buy mobile apps or content is not equal to one who does. Looking at today’s events, I think Apple is doing the right thing gradually moving down market (iPhone 4 and 4S have not been discontinued). This strategy will only expand in coming years. With approximately 400M-500M (and growing) active iOS users with credit cards, I view the iOS ecosystem as now self-sustaining, capable of app innovation as long as the hardware and software back developers up.  If I changed sides and instead only looked at market share, I’m sure I would have been championing Symbian, then Blackberry, and now Android. Market share is not everything.

I fully agree and could not have said it any better myself. We should all start following @SammyWalrusIV on Twitter.

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